It depends on what fuel you are talking about. For nuclear energy, the energy comes from binding energy released when atoms are fissioned or (less commonly) fused.
Fuel oil has chemical energy; chemical energy is a type of potential energy.
You have your logic backwords, energy can be used as a fuel
endothermic energy
Chemical Energy.
using 10 kg of fuel in a fuel cell.
Nuclear energy is not a fossil fuel or any fuel at all. Radiation is used to create energy. The energy is "the Fuel" petroleum
Nuclear fuel is the fuel used to produce nuclear energy.
Fuel oil has chemical energy; chemical energy is a type of potential energy.
The fuel that living things use for energy is glucose.
That is called chemical energy - assuming conventional fuel. Nuclear fuel has nuclear energy.
If there is fuel in the tank then it has chemical energy in that fuel. If it is moving it has kinetic energy. If it is at the top of a hill then it has gravitational potential energy.
No, fuel helps convert energy into a different form of energy thus making something work
chemical energy
Chemical energy
Nuclear energy is produced using uranium as a fuel. The energy produced is in form of heat energy which is used to produce electrical energy.
The energy that is contained in a consumable fuel (like gasoline) is chemical energy. The energy that it is converted into when it is burned is heat energy.
No. It can be an energy source, but it's not a fuel.